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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Surface slicks are pelagic nurseries for diverse ocean fauna

Scientific Reports 2021 45 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jonathan Whitney, Jamison M. Gove, Jonathan Whitney, Jamison M. Gove, Jonathan Whitney, Jonathan Whitney, Margaret A. McManus, Margaret A. McManus, Joey Lecky, Katharine A. Smith, Joey Lecky, Philipp Neubauer, Jana E. Phipps, Emily A. Contreras, Philipp Neubauer, Emily A. Contreras, Katharine A. Smith, Donald R. Kobayashi, Gregory P. Asner Jana E. Phipps, Donald R. Kobayashi, Emily A. Contreras, Emily A. Contreras, Gregory P. Asner Gregory P. Asner

Summary

Field surveys and remote sensing showed that coastal surface slicks serve as nursery habitat for more than 100 fish species and diverse marine invertebrate larvae, with larval densities 2–110 times higher in slicks than in surrounding ambient water.

Study Type Environmental

Most marine animals have a pelagic larval phase that develops in the coastal or open ocean. The fate of larvae has profound effects on replenishment of marine populations that are critical for human and ecosystem health. Larval ecology is expected to be tightly coupled to oceanic features, but for most taxa we know little about the interactions between larvae and the pelagic environment. Here, we provide evidence that surface slicks, a common coastal convergence feature, provide nursery habitat for diverse marine larvae, including > 100 species of commercially and ecologically important fishes. The vast majority of invertebrate and larval fish taxa sampled had mean densities 2-110 times higher in slicks than in ambient water. Combining in-situ surveys with remote sensing, we estimate that slicks contain 39% of neustonic larval fishes, 26% of surface-dwelling zooplankton (prey), and 75% of floating organic debris (shelter) in our 1000 km<sup>2</sup> study area in Hawai'i. Results indicate late-larval fishes actively select slick habitats to capitalize on concentrations of diverse prey and shelter. By providing these survival advantages, surface slicks enhance larval supply and replenishment of adult populations from coral reef, epipelagic, and deep-water ecosystems. Our findings suggest that slicks play a critically important role in enhancing productivity in tropical marine ecosystems.

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